Oh god... watching this is making me sick to my stomach.
I'm going to vomit
Rails are for pussies , Also 308ft for the first drop seems low.We need Docseverin in here talking about "rails are for pussies" or something.
Adrenaline = euphoric feeling.I have a confession. I've never understood the appeal of roller coasters. They terrify me, and I don't like voluntarily terrifying myself.
Also, I brought my Man Card, where do I go to turn it in?
At cedar point with essentially the same coaster, they have weight sensors that weigh the whole train prior to launch, and apply the correct force. The ride is so busy they don't have time to do a relaunch, so if anything they give it a little more than needed, but it almost always goes over.That must depend on how many of the riders are....larger than average.
That Hershey Park coaster looks kinda tame. Doesn't look much better than the Mindbender at West Edmonton Mall.
Fat chance, in a matter of speaking.I didnt get to go on the dragster (the coaster stienman is talking about) but I do know someone that has gone on it and not made it over the top.
Though theres a very good chance shes the reason why...
That looks INSANE.My absolute favorite is Kingda Ka at Six Flags. This thing is nuts. Sometimes it doesn't have enough force to make it over the loop, so they let it roll back to the station and relaunch the bastard again.
Make sure you check the name of the ride before you get on, though.roller coasters are probably one of the safest ways to get an adrenaline rush.
True Story, when I was 7 my parents tried to drag me onto The Bat, and I threw such a fit and cried so hard the lady running the ride wouldn't let them.I was terrified of roller coasters growing up, I don't think it was until I was 15 or 16 that I finally went on one that actually went upside down.
This was my first upside down roller coaster, and if I'm being honest, I have to say is still one of my favourites I've been on:
Short and sweet; drop, loop, loop back down, up, sudden stop, do it all again in reverse.
I wouldn't have gone on when I was 7 either. I wouldn't even go on most WATER SLIDES when I was 7, let alone roller coasters. And anything that went upside down was right out.Almost makes me wish I still lived in Buffalo so that Canada's Wonderland wasn't so far away.
True Story, when I was 7 my parents tried to drag me onto The Bat, and I threw such a fit and cried so hard the lady running the ride wouldn't let them.
See, but my 5 year old brother went on the mother fuckin Bat, I was a total wussy!I wouldn't have gone on when I was 7 either. I wouldn't even go on most WATER SLIDES when I was 7, let alone roller coasters. And anything that went upside down was right out.
That's pretty similar to how The Bat at Wonderland works.My favorite coaster no longer exists; Tidal Wave, at Six Flags Great America in Gurnee, Illinois.
It was very simple: slingshot "push" system catapulted the train forward into a single loop, then up an incline... and then, you did the whole thing backwards, through the station, up another short incline, then back to the station, and to a stop. Best 30 seconds in the world.
True story: I actually WORKED on Tidal Wave. It was a complicated setup. Once the train got clear of the station brakes, you couldn't do anything about it. If the counterweight failed and dropped lower than it was supposed to, you theoretically could "ring the bell" at the top of the first incline. Gravity suggested that the train couldn't get stuck upside-down, of course, but there were one or two times when the train had gotten stuck between the far incline and the loop.
They took it down in favor of Batman: The Ride.
sigh
Fuck that Batman is one of my favorite rides at Six Flags.My favorite coaster no longer exists; Tidal Wave, at Six Flags Great America in Gurnee, Illinois.
It was very simple: slingshot "push" system catapulted the train forward into a single loop, then up an incline... and then, you did the whole thing backwards, through the station, up another short incline, then back to the station, and to a stop. Best 30 seconds in the world.
True story: I actually WORKED on Tidal Wave. It was a complicated setup. Once the train got clear of the station brakes, you couldn't do anything about it. If the counterweight failed and dropped lower than it was supposed to, you theoretically could "ring the bell" at the top of the first incline. Gravity suggested that the train couldn't get stuck upside-down, of course, but there were one or two times when the train had gotten stuck between the far incline and the loop.
They took it down in favor of Batman: The Ride.
sigh
I'm pretty sure the only wooden one I've been on is the Mighty Canadian Minebuster at Wonderland, and yeah it's a bumpy ride, but it's a staple of the trip. You pretty much have to ride it if you're there.I like metal roller coasters. The old wood ones just bounce and slam me around too much. I don't mind loops in roller coasters, but I hate the rides that make you hang upside down for extended periods of time.
I remember going on The Big Bad Wolf in Busch Gardens, Williamsburg, PA back when it was a big deal because it was one of the two first "hanging from the track" type roller coasters there were (the other was XLR-8 at Astroworld in Houston). They're both gone now.
That must depend on how many of the riders are....larger than average.
That Hershey Park coaster looks kinda tame. Doesn't look much better than the Mindbender at West Edmonton Mall.